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Menopause in the Ancient Greek World.

Kristen M. Gentile (Ohio State University)


Menopause is a complex condition that often arouses strong responses from the women
who experience it. However, in the ancient Greek world, menopause is given much less attention
in comparison to other reproductive issues. This lack of interest in menopause is highlighted by
the high degree of attention placed on all the other phases of a woman’s reproductive cycle.
Unfortunately, modern scholarship on both women and ancient gynecology has followed suit,
focusing much more on the youthful virgins and the childbearing mothers with little notice given
to post-menopausal women.
In this paper, I will discuss how menopause was discussed and perceived in ancient
Greece. Further light will be shed on the evidence by contrasting it with modern understandings
of menopause from Western medicine and society. Western medicine employs a disease model
for menopause; it has medicalized this phase of a woman’s life, promoting pharmaceutical
treatments to return the body to its youthful form (Berger 1999). Conversely, Greek medicine
does not consider menopause to be a pathological condition. While much of Hippocratic
gynecology is discussed in terms of pathology, the cessation of menses due to old age is believed
to be natural.
I will explore the ancient explanations for the cessation of menses. In a surprising
contradiction, two of the most discussed symptoms of menopause in Western medicine –hot
flashes and night sweats– directly contrast with the condition of the old female body in antiquity
(Sievert 2006). As women age, they become drier and colder. These changes to their bodily
constitutions account for the cessation of menses, although neither the Hippocratic corpus nor
Aristotle directly gives the reasons for menopause (Dean-Jones 1994). Both sets of texts
generally agree that women cease to menstruate because they no longer have an excess of
nourishment that used to accumulate to form menstrual blood (Hp., Mul. 1.1; Arist., GA 726b).
While this excess diminishes in both men and women, both agree that women age more quickly
than men (Hp., Septim. 9; Arist., GA 775a).
Ultimately, the treatment of menopause and the old female body in general maintain the
belief that the male body is superior to the female body. Even though both sexes become colder
and drier with age, men retain their superiority because women age faster. Unlike in modern
Western society, there is no need for a disease model of menopause or medicalization to create
an inferior menopausal body. The menopausal body is already inferior to the reproductive body
because of the pro-natalist outlook of Greek medicine. A healthy female body is a fecund one,
preferably a pregnant one. This bodily inferiority is in stark contrast to the social freedoms that
some scholars believe older women gained as part of aging (Bremmer 1987). It is this perceived
inferiority of the post-menopausal body that allows these women a measure of social freedom.

Amundsen and Diers 1970. “The Age of Menopause in Classical Greece and Rome.” Human
Biology 42. 79-86.
Berger 1999. Menopause and Culture. Sterling, Virginia: Pluto Press.
Bremmer 1987. “The Old Women of Ancient Greece.” in Sexual Asymmetry: Studies in Ancient
Society. Eds. Josine
Blok and Peter Mason. Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben. 191-215.
Dean-Jones 1994. Women’s Bodies in Classical Greek Science. New York: Clarendon Press.
Sievert 2006. Menopause: A Biocultural Perspective. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University
Press.

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